• Title of article

    Benefits and burden of the maternally-mediated immunological imprinting

  • Author/Authors

    Hilmar Lemke، نويسنده , , Radu Iulian Tanasa، نويسنده , , Ahmad Trad، نويسنده , , Hans Lange، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
  • Pages
    6
  • From page
    394
  • To page
    399
  • Abstract
    The ontogenetic development of both the immune and the nervous system entirely depend on external environmental signals that induce a lifelong learning process. The resulting collective immunological knowledge about the external world is transmitted in an epi-genetic fashion to the offspring, but only from the maternal and not the paternal side, with maternal IgG as the main transgenerational vector. As products of thymus-dependent responses, maternal IgG have undergone immune maturation by somatic hypermutations and are, therefore, acquired immunological phenotypes representing a great deal of the motherʹs immunological experience. During a limited neonatal imprinting period, maternal antibodies induce T cell-dependent idiotypic responses. These exert up to life-long determinative influences which may even be dominant over seemingly genetic predispositions. Such long-term immunological imprinting effects can be detected as (a) selection of the adult T and B cell repertoires, (b) anti-microbial protection by antigen-reactive antibodies (idiotypes) and anti-idiotypes, (c) allergen-specific suppression of IgE responsiveness by allergen-reactive IgG idiotype or corresponding anti-idiotype and (d) induction of autoimmune diseases by maternally-derived autoantibodies. Hence, immunological imprinting by maternal IgG antibodies will mostly be beneficial, but in case of autoantibodies can also be a burden for the initial development of the nascent immune system.
  • Keywords
    Maternal antibodies , Immune and nervous system analogies , Immunological imprinting , Transgenerational protection , Epi-genetic inheritance , Congenital autoimmune disease
  • Journal title
    Autoimmunity Reviews
  • Serial Year
    2009
  • Journal title
    Autoimmunity Reviews
  • Record number

    475009